Down 50% in 2022, should you buy this top streaming stock right now?

General market uncertainty, combined with slowing revenue growth, has punished shares.

| More on:
a family sits together on their sofa watching television.

Imge source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

This article was originally published on Fool.com. All figures quoted in US dollars unless otherwise stated.

The past few months have not been friendly to high-multiple, high-growth tech stocks. Soaring inflation has pushed the Fed to plan to raise interest rates this year, sparking a sell-off into safer assets. Add in the recent geopolitical turmoil, and we have the ingredients for major uncertainty in the stock market. 

Streaming platform Roku (NASDAQ: ROKU) has been severely affected and its stock has been in a downward spiral since last July. Roku's share price has fallen roughly 50% so far in 2022, as overall market pessimism continues hammering the stock. The company is also facing its own set of problems, giving investors lots to think about. 

Should you scoop up discounted shares in this streaming business today? Let's take a closer look.

Roku is dealing with inflation 

Like the rest of the economy, Roku is facing inflationary pressures and supply-chain issues relating to the company's sale of media sticks. While hardware sales only represented 17% of the business in 2021, over the past three quarters, Roku has posted a widening loss -- a negative 28.4% in the most recent quarter on a gross margin basis. Management has decided not to pass on higher component costs to customers. 

Roku's licensed TV partners are also trying to navigate the situation. "Similar to Q3, overall U.S. TV unit sales in Q4 fell below pre-COVID 2019 levels," Anthony Wood, Roku's founder and CEO, highlighted in the shareholder letter. These inventory challenges are clearly hurting sales figures. Since Roku's main objective is to get its operating system into as many households as possible, any headwind to achieving this certainly hurts company performance.  

In 2021, 83% of Roku's overall sales came from its platform segment, which includes high-margin advertising and subscription fees. This is the bread and butter of the business, but even it is struggling in the current economic environment. Organizations that advertise on Roku's platform, particularly in industries like autos and consumer packaged goods, pared back ad spend in the fourth quarter due to their own supply chain disruptions. 

Although Roku increased revenue 33% in Q4 2021, the growth rate missed Wall Street expectations. Furthermore, first-quarter 2022 guidance of 25% year-over-year sales growth disappointed as well. Higher component costs and ongoing supply-chain challenges will continue to negatively affect Roku in the near term, so investors shouldn't be surprised if the player segment's gross margin remains negative in the next few quarters. 

On a positive note, I believe that these issues will prove to be temporary. And the market's pessimism on Roku provides a great buying opportunity for investors. 

The future still looks promising 

If we zoom out and focus on the bigger picture, we'll see that Roku is in a prime position to benefit from the world's transition away from traditional cable TV and toward streaming entertainment. 

Roku is the top streaming platform in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico by hours streamed. In 2021, Roku's 60.1 million active accounts (up 17% year over year) viewed 19.5 billion hours (up 15% year over year) of content. And monetization continues showing strength. Average revenue per user of $41.03 over the trailing 12 months was up 43% compared to the prior-year period.  

There are 1 billion cable-TV subscriptions worldwide, signaling a massive opportunity ahead for Roku. On a micro level, Roku's management cites Nielsen data that shows that the average household in the U.S. watches eight hours of TV per day. And Roku's average active account streams 3.6 hours per day, leaving room for engagement to grow in order to control more TV time. 

And as more TV time goes to streaming, advertising dollars will ultimately follow. According to eMarketer, connected-TV ad spending in the U.S. is forecast to exceed $30 billion in 2025, increasing its share of total digital ad spending. Roku is in an extremely advantageous position to capitalize on this trend. 

Valuation is at a three-year low

Roku's stock is now trading for 5.7 times 2021 revenue. This is the lowest multiple shares have sold for in about three years. The market has completely thrown out Roku with other tech stocks. But this business is a huge leader in the streaming space, and it also has the chance to capture a big chunk of ad dollars that will inevitably flow to connected TV over the next decade. 

With a more attractive valuation today and a long-term thesis that remains intact, Roku's stock looks like a screaming buy right now. 

This article was originally published on Fool.com. All figures quoted in US dollars unless otherwise stated.

Neil Patel owns Roku. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns and has recommended Roku. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Bruce Jackson.

More on International Stock News

International Stock News

Meet the monster stock that continues to crush the market

Has this e-commerce and cloud tech giant found the formula to maintain a brisk rate of growth for years to…

Read more »

Hands holding out two apples representing choice between different shares
International Stock News

Mark Zuckerberg may be right about Apple's lack of innovation. But here's why that shouldn't matter to investors.

Apple may not be the exciting growth stock it was years ago, but could the key to its long-term success…

Read more »

Man looking at digital holograms of graphs, charts, and data.
International Stock News

Could Nvidia stock be due for a crash in 2025? Here's what history says

Investors are divided over whether the Nvidia party will continue or if this semiconductor stock is overvalued and set to…

Read more »

Three people jumping cheerfully in clear sunny weather.
International Stock News

The best Warren Buffett stocks to buy with $10,000 in 2025

Here are three stocks legendary investor Warren Buffett owns at Berkshire Hathaway.

Read more »

A man looks surprised as a woman whispers in his ear.
International Stock News

Nvidia stock investors just got fantastic artificial intelligence (AI) news from President Trump

President Trump announced Stargate, a $500 billion artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure project.

Read more »

Family jumps up and cheers while watching TV.
International Stock News

Nvidia just became the world's most valuable company. Is it too late to buy the stock?

Project Stargate could be just the beginning.

Read more »

a man and a woman in historical costume, Henry the eitghth era, post for a selfie with the man holding a phone above their heads while the two pose with serious faces as seen in historical portraits of people.
International Stock News

President Donald Trump just made stock market history — and it's an ominous warning for investors

Stocks soared during Trump's first term in the White House, with the Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite respectively…

Read more »

man happy while driving tesla
International Stock News

Is the Tesla share price a buy for 2025?

Tesla enters 2025 with strong stock-trading momentum, but can it keep it up?

Read more »